Plant Biology

Stomata

Plant pores controlling gas exchange — open for CO₂, lose water

Stomata (singular: stoma) are tiny pores on plant leaves and stems that control gas exchange. Each stoma flanked by two guard cells — change shape to open or close. Open: CO₂ enters for photosynthesis; H₂O exits via transpiration; O₂ exits as photosynthesis byproduct. Closed: prevents water loss. Trade-off: photosynthesis vs water conservation. Number per leaf: 100-1000+ per mm². Open in light (photosynthesis); close at night, drought, high temperature. Regulated by: light, CO₂, water status, hormones (ABA). Critical for: plant water economy, agriculture, climate-plant interactions.

  • StructurePore + 2 guard cells
  • FunctionGas exchange (CO₂ in, O₂ + H₂O out)
  • Density100-1000+ per mm²
  • OpenIn light (photosynthesis)
  • ClosedDrought, night, high T (water conservation)
  • HormoneABA (abscisic acid) signals closure

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Why stomata matter

  • Photosynthesis. CO₂ entry.
  • Water economy. Major route of plant water loss.
  • Climate change. Rising CO₂ affects stomatal behavior.
  • Agriculture. Drought tolerance breeding.
  • Air quality. Plants take up pollutants via stomata.
  • Plant ecology. Adaptation to different environments.
  • Climate regulation. Transpiration cools planet.

Common misconceptions

  • Stomata always open. Highly regulated.
  • Same on all leaf surfaces. Mostly underside in many plants.
  • Stomata = transpiration. Site of transpiration; gas exchange more.
  • All plants have many. Density varies dramatically.
  • Stomatal control is fast. Minutes to open; faster than once thought.
  • Open = bad. Necessary for photosynthesis.

Frequently asked questions

How do stomata work?

Two guard cells flank pore. Open: water flows into guard cells; cells become turgid; bow apart, opening pore. Closed: water leaves guard cells; cells flat; pore closed. Driven by changes in K⁺ pumped into/out of guard cells (and accompanying water). Result: tiny pore opens/closes within minutes.

What controls stomatal opening?

Multiple signals. (1) Light: opens stomata (blue light especially). (2) CO₂: low CO₂ inside → open more (need more); high → close. (3) Water status: drought stress → ABA released → closes. (4) Temperature: high T → close (reduce water loss). (5) Time of day: open during day; closed at night (most plants). Each signal: integrated by guard cells.

What's the trade-off?

CO₂ uptake vs water loss. Open stomata: CO₂ enters for photosynthesis. But: water vapor diffuses out (transpiration). Plants lose ~98% of water through stomata; only ~2% used in photosynthesis. Trade-off: more photosynthesis → more water loss. Plants in dry conditions: limit opening; sacrifice photosynthesis for water conservation.

How is this related to climate?

Plants adapt stomata to climate. Wet, mild: many stomata, often open (water unlimited). Dry, hot: fewer stomata, often closed (water-limiting). C4 plants: efficient under dry conditions (less stomatal opening needed). CAM plants: stomata only at night (cool, low water loss). Plants from different climates have very different stomatal strategies.

What about agriculture?

Stomatal control important for: (1) Crop yield: water-stressed plants close stomata; reduced photosynthesis; lower yield. (2) Drought tolerance: breeding for plants that maintain photosynthesis under water stress. (3) Climate change: rising CO₂ may reduce stomatal opening (less water loss; same CO₂ uptake). (4) Irrigation: based on plant water needs which depend on stomatal patterns.

How is stomata closed?

ABA (abscisic acid) hormone. Drought triggers ABA production. ABA binds receptors on guard cells; triggers ion movement out (K⁺, Cl⁻); water follows; cells lose turgor; pore closes. Within minutes. Reverses when water returns. Other triggers: high CO₂, darkness, ozone exposure. Mechanism well-understood; targets for drought-tolerant crops.

How are stomata observed?

(1) Microscopy: visible on leaf surface; counted in different conditions. (2) Porometers: measure stomatal conductance (gas flow). (3) Carbon isotope ratios in plant tissue: reveal time-averaged stomatal behavior. (4) Imaging: thermal cameras show transpiration rates. Modern: high-throughput methods for crop research.